Friday, April 24, 2009

On this, as with repayment, the government is speaking out of both sides of Geithner's mouth.

TO BE NOTED: From ChumpChanger:

"The Two Faces Of The Treasury

So does Timothy Geithner want banks to repay TARP funds or not? It seems to me that in Geithner's latest testimony you can find any answer you prefer. On the one hand, the stress tests are supposed to determine which banks have sufficient capital to return government money. On the other, whether the government will take it back will be determined not only by the tests, but whether it is in the national interest: in other words, Treasury would prefer that banks lent out the money than that they return it. The initial assumption that banks that didn't take money would be at a competitive disadvantage has been replaced by another idea (admittedly already present in Hank Paulson's initial pitch) that dividing banks into government supported, tottering ones and self supported stable ones would put the government supported banks at a disadvantage.

There's another, unspoken, assumption--or maybe hope--here, though, which may be even stranger. It is that adding more capital to the banks will make it feasible for them to increase lending to levels that will jump start the economy. To some extent, of course, that's true. Cheap money will be lent out. However, what's keeping the stronger banks from lending right now is not a lack of capital. It is rising losses on loans they've already made. Loans that were risky before are more so now in the midst of a recession, and there is no magic solution that will both increase lending and reduce risk. This ultimately is Treasuries dilemma: telling banks to lend more and do it more responsibly at the same time. On this, as with repayment, the government is speaking out of both sides of Geithner's mouth.

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